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      Representations of Syntax [MASK] Useful: Effects of Constituency and Dependency Structure in Recursive LSTMs

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          Abstract

          Sequence-based neural networks show significant sensitivity to syntactic structure, but they still perform less well on syntactic tasks than tree-based networks. Such tree-based networks can be provided with a constituency parse, a dependency parse, or both. We evaluate which of these two representational schemes more effectively introduces biases for syntactic structure that increase performance on the subject-verb agreement prediction task. We find that a constituency-based network generalizes more robustly than a dependency-based one, and that combining the two types of structure does not yield further improvement. Finally, we show that the syntactic robustness of sequential models can be substantially improved by fine-tuning on a small amount of constructed data, suggesting that data augmentation is a viable alternative to explicit constituency structure for imparting the syntactic biases that sequential models are lacking.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          30 April 2020
          Article
          2005.00019
          4c984a16-f0f9-4fab-9e82-6d98e90401bd

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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          To appear in Proceedings of the 58th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL-2020)
          cs.CL

          Theoretical computer science
          Theoretical computer science

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